Thursday, January 28, 2010

This challenge pits winners of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction against the winners of the National Book Award in the American Version of the Battle of the Prizes. (Click here for the British Version.)

Does one prize have higher standards than the other? Pick better winners? Provide more reading entertainment or educational value? Maybe challenge participants will be able to answer these and more questions – maybe they will simply read three great books!

OPTION: For those who have already read all six of the double-dippers, or otherwise do not want to read one of those six, pick two Pulitzer winners and two National winners for a total of four books.

OFFICIAL RULES

Read all books between February 1, 2010 and January 31, 2011.

Overlap with other challenges is allowed -- and encouraged! The Pulitzer Project and The National Book Award Project are logical crossovers. The great thing is, for those working on both these lists, completing the challenge means reading three books, but crossing four items off the lists.

You do not have to commit to your choices now; you can change your mind about books at any time.

Sign up here by leaving a link to your post in a comment, or the list of your three choices in the comment. I will add the links to the participant list in this post.

As you progress, please let us know by leaving comments with links to progress reports and reviews. Reviews are not necessary, but encouraged. If you do not have a blog, put your reviews or reports in a comment on this post.

You can copy and paste the button. Or, if you want me to send you the code, please leave a comment with an email and I will. I cannot figure out the fancy ways of giving directions.

IDEAS

You can find a list of last year's participants and links to their reviews here.

I picked these three because they are all on my TBR shelf now and they give me a "prize winners by women" theme to work with.

But, I switched when I read a Olive Kitteridge and Let the Great World Spin and decided to use those instead (reviews are listed below). My plan is to read the Porter stories and go with a short story theme instead of a books by women theme.